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Puzzle page

Sep 2001

Similar triangle puzzle

Here is a puzzle which in some ways is similar to last issue's mystery mix, though the solution is much simpler. In fact, you might want to have a look at that article first, to check that you understand the idea of "colouring the plane".

Suppose I colour every point on the plane with one of two colours, red and green, say, and I also give you a triangle. Then can you find a triangle in the plane, similar to the given triangle, whose 3 vertices are all the same colour? (Remember that similar triangles are the same shape, but not necessarily the same size.)

Can you prove that there is always a similar triangle with this property (or else find a counterexample, of course)?

Here is an elementary but useful piece of geometry that might help. Suppose you have a triangle:

[IMAGE: triangle]

You find the midpoints of all the edges, and join them up like this:

[IMAGE: triangle quartered by joining midpoints]

This divides the triangle into four smaller triangles, all of which are similar to the original triangle.

With this in mind, can you solve the puzzle?


You can send your solution by e-mail to <plus@maths.cam.ac.uk>.

For some challenging mathematical puzzles, see the NRICH puzzles from this month or last month.

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